8,548 research outputs found
Spectral Analysis of the Stromlo-APM Survey I. Spectral Properties of Galaxies
We analyze spectral properties of 1671 galaxies from the Stromlo-APM survey,
selected to have 15 < b_J < 17.15 and having a mean redshift z = 0.05. This is
a representative local sample of field galaxies, so the global properties of
the galaxy population provide a comparative point for analysis of more distant
surveys. We measure Halpha, Oii 3727, Sii 6716, 6731, Nii 6583 and Oi 6300
equivalent widths and the D_4000 break index. The 5A resolution spectra use an
8 arcsec slit, which typically covers 40-50% of the galaxy area. We find no
evidence for systematic trends depending on the fraction of galaxy covered by
the slit, and further analysis suggests that our spectra are representative of
integrated galaxy spectra.
We classify spectra according to their Halpha emission, which is closely
related to massive star formation. Overall we find 61% of galaxies are Halpha
emitters with rest-frame equivalent widths EW(Halpha) >= 2A. The emission-line
galaxy (ELG) fraction is smaller than seen in the CFRS at z = 0.2 and is
consistent with a rapid evolution of Halpha luminosity density. The ELG
fraction, and EW(Halpha), increase at fainter absolute magnitudes, smaller
projected area and smaller D_4000. In the local Universe, faint, small galaxies
are dominated by star formation activity, while bright, large galaxies are more
quiescent. This picture of the local Universe is quite different from the
distant one, where bright galaxies appear to show rapidly-increasing activity
back in time.
(Abridged)Comment: 40 pages, 25 figures, MNRAS, in pres
A statistical model for the intrinsically broad superconducting to normal transition in quasi-two-dimensional crystalline organic metals
Although quasi-two-dimensional organic superconductors such as
-(BEDT-TTF)Cu(NCS) seem to be very clean systems, with apparent
quasiparticle mean-free paths of several thousand \AA, the superconducting
transition is intrinsically broad (e.g K wide for K).
We propose that this is due to the extreme anisotropy of these materials, which
greatly exacerbates the statistical effects of spatial variations in the
potential experienced by the quasiparticles. Using a statistical model, we are
able to account for the experimental observations. A parameter , which
characterises the spatial potential variations, may be derived from
Shubnikov-de Haas oscillation experiments. Using this value, we are able to
predict a transition width which is in good agreement with that observed in MHz
penetration-depth measurements on the same sample.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Condens. Matte
Insights and possible resolution to the information loss paradox via the tunneling picture
This paper investigates the information loss paradox in the WKB/tunneling
picture of Hawking radiation. In the tunneling picture one can obtain the
tunneling amplitude to all orders in . However all terms beyond the
lowest, semi-classical term involve unknown constants. Despite this we find
that one can still arrive at interesting restrictions on Hawking radiation to
all orders in : (i) Taking into account only quantum corrections the
spectrum remains thermal to all orders. Thus quantum corrections by themselves
will not resolve the information loss paradox. (ii) The first quantum
correction give a temperature for the radiation which goes to zero as the mass
of the black hole goes to zero. Including higher order corrections changes this
nice result of the first order corrections. (iii) Finally we show that by
taking both quantum corrections and back reaction into account it is possible
under specific conditions to solve the information paradox by having the black
hole evaporate completely with the information carried away by the correlations
of the outgoing radiation.Comment: 16 pages revtex, 4 figures. The formula for temperature is corrected.
Main conclusion about the possible resolution to information loss paradox
unchanged. Erratum to be published JHE
Glueball Spin
The spin of a glueball is usually taken as coming from the spin (and possibly
the orbital angular momentum) of its constituent gluons. In light of the
difficulties in accounting for the spin of the proton from its constituent
quarks, the spin of glueballs is reexamined. The starting point is the
fundamental QCD field angular momentum operator written in terms of the
chromoelectric and chromomagnetic fields. First, we look at the restrictions
placed on the structure of glueballs from the requirement that the QCD field
angular momentum operator should satisfy the standard commutation
relationships. This can be compared to the electromagnetic charge/monopole
system, where the quantization of the field angular momentum places
restrictions (i.e. the Dirac condition) on the system. Second, we look at the
expectation value of this operator under some simplifying assumptions.Comment: 11 pages, 0 figures; added references and some discussio
Hawking radiation, chirality, and the principle of effective theory of gravity
In this paper we combine the chirality of field theories in near horizon
regions with the principle of effective theory of gravity to define a new
energy-momentum tensor for the theory. This new energy-momentum tensor has the
correct radiation flux to account for Hawking radiation for space-times with
horizons. This method is connected to the chiral anomaly cancellation method,
but it works for space-times for which the chiral anomaly cancellation method
fails. In particular the method presented here works for the non-asymptotically
flat de Sitter space-time and its associated Hawking-Gibbons radiation, as well
as Rindler space-time and its associated Unruh radiation. This indicates that
it is the chiral nature of the field theory in the near horizon regions which
is of primary importance rather than the chiral anomaly.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX, no figures, to appear in JHEP; v2: two references
added and various cosmetic (but no physics) changes to match published
versio
Studies of vertical wind profiles at Cape Kennedy, Florida Final report
Vertical wind profiles spectral analysis and numerical wind forecasts at Cape Kenned
Periodic Instantons in SU(2) Yang-Mills-Higgs Theory
The properties of periodic instanton solutions of the classical SU(2) gauge
theory with a Higgs doublet field are described analytically at low energies,
and found numerically for all energies up to and beyond the sphaleron energy.
Interesting new classes of bifurcating complex periodic instanton solutions to
the Yang-Mills-Higgs equations are described.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures (in 5 included eps files), ReVTeX (minor typos
corrected and reference added
The general relativistic infinite plane
Uniform fields are one of the simplest and most pedagogically useful examples
in introductory courses on electrostatics or Newtonian gravity. In general
relativity there have been several proposals as to what constitutes a uniform
field. In this article we examine two metrics that can be considered the
general relativistic version of the infinite plane with finite mass per unit
area. The first metric is the 4D version of the 5D "brane" world models which
are the starting point for many current research papers. The second case is the
cosmological domain wall metric. We examine to what extent these different
metrics match or deviate from our Newtonian intuition about the gravitational
field of an infinite plane. These solutions provide the beginning student in
general relativity both computational practice and conceptual insight into
Einstein's field equations. In addition they do this by introducing the student
to material that is at the forefront of current research.Comment: Accepted for publication in the American Journal of Physic
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